Employees Are Taking Lower Salaries , To Work From Home.<br />NPR reports that as the pandemic <br />began to rage in 2020, .<br />companies started to embrace <br />what many thought to be a <br />temporary experiment with remote work.<br />Almost three years after the fact, over a <br />third of employees in America say they <br />intend to keep working from home.<br />In a recent poll by McKinsey & Company, almost 25% of Americans say they can at least work from home part-time.<br />Nearly six in ten Americans say they could work remotely at least once per week.<br />Per NPR, 87% of workers who are offered <br />"at least some remote work," have <br />jumped at the opportunity.<br />A recent economic study found that many companies have capitalized on remote work.<br />using it in place of offering employees <br />raises. Some say that such tactics <br />could help moderate inflation.<br />We conclude that the recent rise of remote work materially lessens wage-growth pressures. , Jose Maria Barrero, Nicholas Bloom, Steven J. Davis, Brent H. Meyer & Emil Mihaylov, economists, via NPR.<br />In doing so, the rise of <br />remote work eases the <br />challenge confronting <br />monetary policy makers... , Jose Maria Barrero, Nicholas Bloom, Steven J. Davis, Brent H. Meyer & Emil Mihaylov, economists, via NPR.<br />... in their efforts to bring <br />the inflation rate down to acceptable levels without <br />stalling economic growth. , Jose Maria Barrero, Nicholas Bloom, Steven J. Davis, Brent H. Meyer & Emil Mihaylov, economists, via NPR